Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

diskarbitrationd(8) [opendarwin man page]

DISKARBITRATIOND(8)					    BSD System Manager's Manual 				       DISKARBITRATIOND(8)

NAME
diskarbitrationd -- disk arbitration daemon SYNOPSIS
diskarbitrationd [-d] DESCRIPTION
diskarbitrationd listens for connections from clients, notifies clients of the appearance of disks and filesystems, and governs the mounting of filesystems and the claiming of disks amongst clients. diskarbitrationd is accessed via the Disk Arbitration framework. Options: -d Report detailed information in /var/log/diskarbitrationd.log. This option forces diskarbitrationd to run in the foreground. The file /etc/fstab is consulted for user-defined mount points, indexed by filesystem, in the mount point determination for a filesystem. Each filesystem can be identified by its UUID or by its label, using the constructs ``UUID'' or ``LABEL'', respectively. For example: UUID=DF000C7E-AE0C-3B15-B730-DFD2EF15CB91 /export ufs ro UUID=FAB060E9-79F7-33FF-BE85-E1D3ABD3EDEA none hfs rw,noauto LABEL=The40Volume40Name40Is40This none msdos ro FILES
/etc/fstab /var/log/diskarbitrationd.log /var/run/diskarbitrationd.pid SEE ALSO
fstab(5) Darwin July 18, 2003 Darwin

Check Out this Related Man Page

HFS.UTIL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					       HFS.UTIL(8)

NAME
hfs.util -- HFS/HFS+ file system utility SYNOPSIS
hfs.util -m device mountpoint [mountflag1] [mountflag2] [mountflag3] [mountflag4] hfs.util -p device [mountflag1] [mountflag2] [mountflag3] [mountflag4] hfs.util -J [size] mountpoint hfs.util -U mountpoint hfs.util -N device hfs.util -I mountpoint hfs.util [-aksu] device DESCRIPTION
The hfs.util command supports the mounting, probing, and unmounting of HFS file systems. Options: -a Adopt permissions for the HFS file system at device -I Print out status information about the journal on the HFS file system at mountpoint -J [size] Enable journaling on the HFS file system mounted on mountpoint. An optional size may be specified (e.g. 32M for a 32 megabyte journal). -k Get the UUID key for the HFS file system at device. -m Mount the HFS file system located on device onto mountpoint with the flags mountflag1 mountflag2 mountflag3 mountflag4 -M Force mount the HFS file system located on device onto mountpoint with the flags mountflag1 mountflag2 mountflag3 mountflag4. This is a deprecated option. -N Disable journaling on a HFS+ file system located at device -p Probe the device for an HFS file system using the flags mountflag1 mountflag2 mountflag3 mountflag4 -s Set the UUID key (generates a new UUID value) for the HFS file system at device -u Unmount the HFS file system located at device -U Disable journaling on the HFS+ file system mounted on mountpoint The mountflags referenced above are either: o removable or fixed o readonly or writeable o suid or nosuid o dev or nodev Note that for the device references above, you must only supply the last component of the path to the device in question, such as disk0s2 rather than /dev/disk0s2. SEE ALSO
diskarbitrationd(8) HISTORY
Derived from the Openstep Workspace Manager file system utility programs. Darwin July 16, 2003 Darwin
Man Page

2 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Shopt -s histappend

What is the point of this? Whenever I close my shell it appends to the history file without adding this. I have never seen it overwrite my history file. # When the shell exits, append to the history file instead of overwriting it shopt -s histappend (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
3 Replies

2. OS X (Apple)

Undeletable file

Greetings, I'm trying to delete a file with a weird name from within Terminal on a Mac. It's a very old file (1992) with null characters in the name: “␀␀Word FinderÂŽ Plus™”. Here are some examples of what I've tried: 12FX009:5 dpontius$ ls ␀␀Word FinderÂŽ Plus™ 12FX009:5 dpontius$ rm... (29 Replies)
Discussion started by: dpontius
29 Replies